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Summer McIntosh breaks third world record in five days, a Phelpsian feat

Summer McIntosh is the first swimmer to break a world record in three different individual events at one long course meet since Michael Phelps at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. McIntosh, a triple 2024 Olympic gold medalist, lowered her own 400m individual medley world record on Wednesday at the Canadian trials for the World Championships in […]

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Summer McIntosh breaks third world record in five days, a Phelpsian feat

Summer McIntosh is the first swimmer to break a world record in three different individual events at one long course meet since Michael Phelps at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

McIntosh, a triple 2024 Olympic gold medalist, lowered her own 400m individual medley world record on Wednesday at the Canadian trials for the World Championships in Singapore in July and August.

She clocked 4 minutes, 23.65 seconds, beating her previous record of 4:24.38 set at the 2024 Canadian Olympic Trials.

“Going into tonight, I knew I think I could do something really special, just because this meet has been probably my best meet of my career,” she said in a poolside interview. “I think world records are made to be broken, so by the time I leave this sport, I want to make sure that record is as fast as possible.”

Earlier at these trials, McIntosh reclaimed the 400m free world record (Saturday) and broke a 10-year-old world record in the 200m individual medley (Monday).

“It’s more fun chasing records that you haven’t broken yet, but I think it’s immensely easier to break your own just because you kind of have to look at it as just going a personal-best time,” she said.

She also swam the third-fastest time in history in the 800m free (Sunday) and the second-fastest time in history in the 200m butterfly (Tuesday).

Summing it up, McIntosh said she owed a lot of credit to Fred Vergnoux, her temporary coach while she’s trained in France this year. She previously trained in Sarasota, Florida.

“He’s really taken me to the next level in the sport and pushed me farther,” she said. “I’ve gone way faster than I ever could have imagined.”

McIntosh, an 18-year-old from Toronto, has put together one of the best single-meet performances in history.

The list starts with Phelps’ eight-gold-medal effort at the 2008 Beijing Games. There, he broke individual world records in the 200m and 400m IMs, the 200m fly and the 200m free. He also broke world records in four individual events at one meet at the 2003 Worlds and the 2007 Worlds.

The last woman to break three individual world records at one long course meet was Inge de Bruijn of the Netherlands at the 2000 Sydney Games, according to Olympic historian Bill Mallon of the OlyMADMen.

Phelps is the only swimmer to win five individual events at a single Olympics (2008) or World Championships (2007).

McIntosh can match that at this summer’s worlds. She has said she plans to swim five individual events: her three Olympic gold-medal events — both IMs, 200m fly — plus the 400m free and one of the 200m free, 200m backstroke or 800m free.

If she chooses the 800m free, it could be the most anticipated race of the meet given the presence of Katie Ledecky, the four-time reigning Olympic gold medalist in the event. McIntosh last raced the 800m free at a major international meet at the Tokyo Olympics, when the Canadian was 14.

“You don’t see many swimmers decide to go up (in distance),” Vergnoux said, according to the Toronto Star. “You know, Ledecky is the best distance female athlete in swimming ever, so far. Maybe we look in 10 years and we say, ‘OK, well, Ledecky used to be, and now it’s Summer, I don’t know.’ (But) I don’t think this way. I don’t put any energy in this. Summer doesn’t put any energy on this.

“What we want to do is make sure that we’re good on a daily basis.”

After worlds, McIntosh plans to move to Austin, Texas, and start being coached by Bob Bowman, who coached Phelps for his entire career.

Summer McIntosh, an Olympic swimmer from Canada, is challenging Katie Ledecky while still in high school.

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Qatar’s Cherif and Ahmed win first Gstaad gold

Qatari Olympic medalists Cherif Younousse and Ahmed Tijan secured their second title in three Volleyball World Beach Pro Tour events this season on Sunday, triumphing at the prestigious Elite tournament held in Gstaad. The Asians topped the podium at the Swiss Alps for the first time in their careers and had by their sides second-placed […]

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Qatari Olympic medalists Cherif Younousse and Ahmed Tijan secured their second title in three Volleyball World Beach Pro Tour events this season on Sunday, triumphing at the prestigious Elite tournament held in Gstaad.

The Asians topped the podium at the Swiss Alps for the first time in their careers and had by their sides second-placed Swedish Jacob Hölting Nilsson and Elmer Andersson and third-placed Dutch Stefan Boermans and Yorick de Groot.

In order to take gold in Gstaad, Cherif and Ahmed prevailed in two close sets (21-19, 22-20) over Hölting Nilsson and Andersson, stopping a big late push from the Swedish, who came back from a 20-15 deficit to avoid five matches points and level the score at 20 in the second set before Ahmed scored twice in a row to confirm the Qatari victory.

“They had been playing very well since the tournament started,” Cherif said. “So we were ready for everything. Their comeback in the second set was crazy, but we knew they were able to do it. There are no easy matches at this level and you need to expect anything.”

Cherif and Ahmed had somewhat of a late start to the 2025 season after taking bronze at last year’s Beach Pro Tour Finals, as the two didn’t appear in a Beach Pro Tour event until May, when they took gold at the Xiamen Challenge. After that, they played in the Ostrava Elite, in June, finishing fifth.

It took the Qatari Olympians seven attempts to claim the golden cowbells in Gstaad as they first played together in the Swiss village back in 2018.

“We need to thank the fans here in Gstaad,” Cherif added. “Since 2021, every time we play here, it doesn’t matter who’s on the other side of the net, they always support us.”

Boermans and de Groot take bronze

In the bronze medal match, Boermans and de Groot overcame Brazilian Olympians André Loyola and George Wanderley in the tie-breaker (21-23, 21-17, 15-10), finishing third. The Dutch played together in Gstaad for just the second time and had taken gold in the first one, back in 2021.

The bronze cowbells also serve as a birthday present for de Groot, who celebrated his 25th birthday on the sand in the Swiss Alps.

“Of course, I would prefer to play in the final, but to be able to compete on Sunday, on my birthday, it’s really special,” de Groot said. “The venue is incredible here, and to win bronze against a really strong Brazilian team is amazing.”

After Gstaad, the next Elite event on the Beach Pro Tour schedule is the one in Montréal, Canada, from August 13-17.

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CQBF executive director Yasser Dhouib.
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Two medals at the European Junior Championships in Slovakia. Rari, Nannucci gold. And Giannelli silver

La Rare Nantes Florentia stands out at the European Juniors in Samorin, Slovakia, where two of its athletes reached the podium: Bianca Nanucci gold medal in the 200 freestyle, and Emma Victoria Giannelli silver in the 1.500 freestyle. Bianca, born in 2008, trained by Lorenzo Palagi, graduated as the strongest in Europe at the end […]

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La Rare Nantes Florentia stands out at the European Juniors in Samorin, Slovakia, where two of its athletes reached the podium: Bianca Nanucci gold medal in the 200 freestyle, and Emma Victoria Giannelli silver in the 1.500 freestyle. Bianca, born in 2008, trained by Lorenzo Palagi, graduated as the strongest in Europe at the end of a masterly race, imposing herself with authority from the first laps and resisting the comeback of her opponents in the final part. That the red and white swimmer has now become an absolute protagonist over the distance is also confirmed by the bronze won just a week ago at the Settecolli Trophy in Rome which definitively crowns the rarina as one of the new stars of the blue swimming.

Of equal value is the title of European vice-champion won by Emma Vittoria, one year older, in the 1.500m distance after fighting until the last length of an intense and exciting final. This performance, with a time of 16’13″11, also improves her previous personal best of 16’17″19 with which she won silver in Vilnius a year ago. In the meantime, the Italian Swimming Federation has announced the call-ups for the World Championships scheduled in Singapore from 27 July to 3 August; on this occasion, Rari has once again outdone itself: the second most represented Italian club in the blue, with five athletes and coach Paolo Palchetti, already a member of the Italnuoto staff at the Paris Olympic Games. Leading the group will be the new European junior champion Bianca Nannucci, the youngest of the team; the expedition is completed by Matilde Biagiotti, Filippo Megli and Lorenzo Zazzeri, three reference athletes for Italian swimming, already protagonists in the international field who, together, represent the excellence and technical solidity built up over the years by Rari. Further strengthening the weight of the lily club in the Italian representation is also the call-up of Costanza Cocconcelli, registered with Fiamme Gialle/Azzurra 91 but trained for over two years by Palchetti in Florence.

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Supreme Court Dives Back Into Culture Wars, Taking Take Up Idaho, West Virginia Transgender Sports Bans

Female athletes who oppose allowing trans athletes to compete in women’s sports participate in the “Tell the NCAA: Stop Discriminating Against Female Athletes” rally outside an NCAA convention in San Antonio in 2023. (Photo: Alliance Defending Freedom) This story has been updated. By Gary Gately Plunging back into the nation’s culture wars, the U.S. Supreme […]

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Female athletes who oppose allowing trans athletes to compete in women’s sports participate in the “Tell the NCAA: Stop Discriminating Against Female Athletes” rally outside an NCAA convention in San Antonio in 2023. (Photo: Alliance Defending Freedom)

This story has been updated.

By Gary Gately

Plunging back into the nation’s culture wars, the U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to take up two cases on whether states can ban transgender athletes from competing on girls’ and women’s sports teams.

Thursday’s decision to review lower court rulings that barred enforcement of such bans in Idaho and West Virginia came just over two weeks after the high court’s conservative majority upheld Tennessee’s ban on puberty blockers and hormone therapy for transgender minors. In the term that just ended, the six conservative justices also granted President Donald J. Trump’s emergency request to let his ban on openly trans people in the military take effect and ruled that parents could opt their elementary school children out of classroom discussions of storybooks with LGBTQ characters.

Trump’s Justice Department has also filed a series of lawsuits and launched investigations over state and school policies that have allowed transgender athletes to compete on girls’ and women’s sports teams.

Idaho enacted the nation’s first ban on trans athletes participating in girls’ and women’s sports in 2020, and 26 other states have since done so. But some of the laws have been blocked by courts, and GOP congressional lawmakers failed in a bid to pass a nationwide trans sports ban in March. Democrats argued that such a ban would require invasive and potentially abusive sex testing of girls and pointed out that trans people represent a tiny fraction of high school and college athletes.

The Supreme Court will take up the Idaho and West Virginia cases in its next term, which begins in October. The two states asked the justices to review the appeals court decisions blocking enforcement of the bans.

In the Idaho case, Lindsay Hecox, who wanted to try out for the Boise State University cross-country and track and field teams, sued in 2020 to challenge the “Fairness in Women’s Sports Act,” which banned transgender women and girls from playing on girls’ and women’s sports teams at public schools, colleges and universities. Hecox argued that the ban violated the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, a landmark federal law that prohibits sex-based discrimination in any education program or activity that receives federal funding.

Idaho U.S. District Judge David Nye blocked enforcement of the law in August 2020, concluding that Hecox would likely succeed on the merits of her claims.

Nye wrote that the ban “on its face discriminates between cisgender athletes, who may compete on athletic teams consistent with their gender identity, and transgender women athletes, who may not compete on athletic teams consistent with their gender identity.”

Nye also faulted the law for categorically excluding trans women from female sports and subjecting participants in female athletics to a “potentially invasive” process for verifying a student’s biological sex.

The San Francisco-based U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals agreed last year that the law likely violates the Constitution.

In Idaho’s petition to the Supreme Court, Republican Attorney General Raúl R. Labrador, joined by the conservative Christian legal group Alliance Defending Freedom, wrote that the state’s ban “ensures that women and girls are not forced to compete against men and boys who benefit from the enduring physical differences between men and women.”

“Allowing males who identify as females to compete in women’s and girls’ sports destroys fair competition, safety, and women’s athletic opportunities,” the petition states. “Female athletes are losing medals, podium spots, public recognition, and opportunities to compete due to males who insist on participating in women’s sports. So much of what women and girls have achieved for themselves over the course of several decades is being stolen from them — all under the guise of ‘equality.’”

The two challenges to state trans sports bans the Supreme Court has agreed to take up involve Becky Pepper-Jackson of West Virginia (left) and Lindsay Hecox of Idaho. (Photos: ACLU of West Virginia, ACLU of Idaho)

Hecox tried out for Boise State’s NCAA cross-country and track teams but didn’t make the cut and then participated in the university’s club soccer and running teams.

She has received treatment since 2019 for gender dysphoria, a feeling of distress or unease that can occur when gender identity doesn’t match someone’s biological sex at birth. Her treatments have included testosterone suppression and estrogen.

The West Virginia case centers on transgender athlete Becky Pepper-Jackson, whose mother, Heather Jackson, sued after a middle school principal, citing the state’s transgender sports ban, told her daughter that she couldn’t compete on the school’s cross-country team, which she had hoped to try out for.

Attorneys from the American Civil Liberties Union, part of the legal team representing the trans athletes in both cases, argued that school athletic programs should be accessible to everyone regardless of a student’s sex or transgender status.

“Categorically excluding kids from school sports just because they are transgender will only make our schools less safe and more hurtful places for all youth,” Joshua Block, senior counsel for the ACLU’s LGBTQ & HIV Project, said in a statement Thursday. “We believe the lower courts were right to block these discriminatory laws, and we will continue to defend the freedom of all kids to play.”

U.S. District Judge Joseph Goodwin in West Virginia initially blocked enforcement of the West Virginia law, saying Jackson would likely succeed on the merits of her argument that the trans sports ban violated the 14th Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause and Title IX. But Goodwin later ruled in favor of the state in a summary judgment.

A divided 4th U.S. Court of Appeals, based in Richmond, ruled in April 2024 that the law discriminated against Becky, now 15, on the basis of sex, violating Title IX.

Becky, who has publicly identified as a girl since third grade, takes puberty-blocking medication to prevent male puberty and receives estrogen hormone therapy.

She shined this year on her high school’s track-and-field team, finishing third in discus and eighth in shot-put in the statewide championship.

In its Supreme Court petition, West Virginia argued that the appeals court’s majority’s holding “upends the Title IX and equal protection frameworks” and “tacitly overturns countless cases upholding sex distinctions for bathrooms, prisons, physical-fitness tests, and more.”

The decision “rewrites Title IX, a law designed to protect female athletes, into one that subordinates their interests to those of certain males,” the petition states

West Virginia’s Republican attorney general, John “JB” McCuskey, said Thursday that he’s confident the Supreme Court will uphold the “Save Women’s Sports Act.”

“It’s a great day, as female athletes in West Virginia will have their voices heard,” McCuskey added in a statement. “The people of West Virginia know that it’s unfair to let male athletes compete against women; that’s why we passed this commonsense law preserving women’s sports for women…..

“And most importantly, it protects women and girls by ensuring the playing field is safe and fair. It’s time to return girls’ sports to the girls and stop this misguided gender ideology once and for all.”

West Virginia Attorney General John “JB” McCuskey (Photo: Office of Attorney General John “JB” McCuskey)

Kristen Waggoner, Alliance Defending Freedom’s CEO, president and chief general counsel, shared McCuskey’s sentiments.

“Women and girls deserve to compete on a level playing field, but activists continue their quest to erase differences between men and women by forcing schools to allow men to compete in women’s sports,” Waggoner said in a statement. “This contradicts biological reality and common sense. We should be seeking to protect women’s sports and equal opportunities, and West Virginia’s and Idaho’s women’s sports laws accomplish just that.”

Trump had seized on the issue of trans rights late in his campaign, when he vowed to eliminate “transgender insanity” from schools and bar trans athletes from competing on girls’ and women’s sports teams. One of the campaign’s most memorable ads noted that former vice president and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris expressed support during her 2019 presidential campaign for taxpayer-funded gender transitions in prisons. “Kamala is for they/them. President Trump is for you,” the narrator says, employing the pronouns used by some transgender and nonbinary people — a term describing genders that don’t fit into the traditional male/female binary.

Upon taking office, Trump quickly made good on his promises through a series of executive orders, including ones that decreed that the U.S. government would recognize only two sexes, male and female; end diversity, equity and inclusion programs across the federal government; move to keep openly transgender people out of the military; ban gender-transition treatment, described as “chemical and surgical mutilation”; and deny funding to public K-12 schools and colleges that allow trans athletes to compete on girls’ and women’s sports teams.

The NCAA caved under pressure from the Trump administration, changing its policy in February to prevent trans athletes from competing in women’s sports.

And last week, the University of Pennsylvania agreed to ban trans women from competing in women’s sports and wiped out records set by trans swimmer Lia Thomas. The move came after the Trump administration froze $175 million in federal funds to the Ivy League school, saying it violated Title IX by allowing trans women to participate in women’s sports. The government released the funds after Penn adopted the ban.

Trump’s Justice Department also threatened legal action last week against California public schools if they did not reverse a decade-long policy by banning trans athletes from competing in high school sports.

While LGBTQ rights, and transgender rights in particular, have divided Americans, multiple polls show U.S. adults favor by significant margins bans on trans female athletes being allowed to compete in girls’ and women’s sports

A May poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, for example, found that about 7 in 10 U.S. adults think transgender female athletes should not be allowed to participate in girls and women’s sports at the high school, college or professional level. Nine in 10 Republicans shared that view, compared with roughly half of Democrats. The poll also found that about two-thirds of U.S. adults agree with Trump’s view that whether a person is male or female is determined by biological gender at birth.

And a June 2024 Gallup poll found that 51% of Americans think changing one’s gender is morally wrong, while 44% say it is morally acceptable.

Trump, who won the Catholic vote by a bigger margin than any other presidential candidate in more than a half-century, has drawn support from U.S. bishops for policies based on his view that only two sexes exist, male and female.

In a January statement, Archbishop Timothy P. Broglio, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), praised Trump’s executive orders for “recognizing the truth about each human person as male or female.”

And in a brief in United States v. Skrmetti, the case in which the Supreme Court upheld Tennessee’s ban on gender-affirming care for minors, the USCCB argued that such care is “immoral and contrary to God’s will” and attempts to “alter the fundamental sexual differences between men and women.”

The Vatican and U.S. bishops have unequivocally opposed “gender theory,” or the idea that one’s gender can be changed, and sex-change surgery. In April 2024, the Vatican condemned gender theory and sex-change surgery as “grave threats” to human dignity in a highly anticipated document signed by Pope Francis, the Jesuit pontiff who died in April at age 88.

In the 20-page “Dignitas Infinita” (“Infinite Dignity”), five years in the making, the Vatican’s doctrinal office emphatically states that gender theory “intends to deny the greatest possible difference that exists between living beings: sexual difference.”

“Any sex-change intervention, as a rule, risks threatening the unique dignity the person has received from the moment of conception” as an “irrevocable gift from God” and amounts to succumbing “to the age-old temptation to make oneself God,” the document adds.

At the same time, Francis made reaching out to LGBTQ people a hallmark of his 12-year papacy and urged Catholics to treat them with compassion, dignity and respect. For his part, Pope Leo XIV has said little about LGBTQ issues since his May 8 election as the first U.S.-born pope. That has left some advocates wondering whether he’ll continue Francis’ emphasis on inclusivity for LGBTQ people.

Some Catholic LGBTQ advocates have sharply criticized recent Supreme Court decisions which they say target LGBTQ youths and put them at grave risk.

Marianne Duddy-Burke, executive director of the Catholic LGBTQ advocacy group DignityUSA, said after the Supreme Court’s 6-3 ruling in Skrmetti: “DignityUSA deeply objects to today’s Supreme Court ruling that upholds a Tennessee law, and by extension laws in at least 20 other states, that bans scientifically supported care for transgender youth.”

Duddy-Burke said she views the June 18 ruling “as dangerous, as a violation of human and parental rights and as a failure to take decades of testimony from transgender and nonbinary individuals seriously.”

Marianne Duddy-Burke, executive director of the Catholic LGBTQ advocacy group DignityUSA (Photo: New Ways Ministry)

Most major medical associations, including the American Medical Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Psychological Association, support access to gender-affirming care. The associations point to research showing that such care improves the physical and mental health of youths with gender dysphoria, which has been linked to high rates of depression, anxiety, suicidal thoughts and suicide attempts.

“Catholicism teaches that we should affirm and uplift the dignity of human life,” Duddy-Burke said. “At DignityUSA, we support transgender youths’ right to access lifesaving and life-affirming medical care, knowing that the scientific and medical consensus is that gender care improves outcomes for them.”

Francis DeBernardo, executive director of New Ways Ministry, a Catholic LGBTQ advocacy group, wrote on its blog, Bondings 2.0, after the Skrmetti ruling that all Catholic leaders should read a passage from Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s dissent in the case.

In the dissent, Sotomayor wrote: “Transgender adolescents’ access to hormones and puberty blockers (known as gender-affirming care) is not a matter of mere cosmetic preference. To the contrary, access to care can be a question of life or death.”

Sotomayor — who is Catholic (as are Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel A. Alito Jr., Brett M. Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett) — cited research showing that gender dysphoria can lead to high rates of severe anxiety, depression, eating disorders, substance abuse, self-harm and suicide attempts. The dissent noted that studies suggest that as many as a third of trans high school students attempt suicide any given year.

DeBernardo wrote: “While some Catholic leaders will cling to ideas about the fixed nature of the male/female binary, they must recognize that in holding to these ideas and trying to enshrine them in law, they are causing immeasurable human harm. Catholics may disagree with the political and legal dimensions of this case, but they should not ignore the ethical dimension that human lives are on the line.”

Research has also consistently shown that many LGBTQ youths endure bullying, threats and sometimes violence and that they suffer significantly higher rates of anxiety, depression and suicide attempts than their non-LGBTQ peers.

Against that backdrop, Jesuit priest, journalist and author Father James Martin suggested that the Supreme Court’s 6-3 decision on June 27 allowing parents in Montgomery County, Maryland’s largest school district, to pull their children out of classes featuring discussion of books with LGBTQ characters sends the wrong message.

“Pretty soon, it’s possible that even speaking to, or doing business with, an LGBTQ person (or having them teach your children) could be framed as a threat to one’s ‘religious values,’” Martin wrote on the Catholic LGBTQ website Outreach. “It’s important to remember that Christianity should not be used as a fig leaf for homophobia. Moreover, many straight Christians want to be welcoming to LGBTQ people; and many straight Christian parents pray that their children will come to know LGBTQ people as their brothers and sisters. Being Christian does not mean being homophobic.”

For her part, Duddy-Burke accused the court’s conservative majority of “supporting bigotry” in the decision.

“We stand with the many thoughtful educators and school administrators who know that this decision is bad for children, bad for schools, and a futile effort to erase the reality that LGBTQ+ people are part of every community,” Duddy-Burke told The Catholic Observer.

“Parents already have many ways to share their values with their children. However, this attempt to make schools bend to bias sets a dangerous precedent. It also continues a very disturbing and dangerous interpretation of religious liberty.”

A U.S. flag and a Pride flag (Photo: iStock)

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Former College Athlete Launches App to Help High School Athletes

Former College Athlete Launches App to Help High School Athletes ✕ VIEW Link 0

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Former Nebraska Volleyball Star Gets Engaged Over July 4 Weekend

Former Nebraska Husker volleyball star Lindsay Krause added one more thing to celebrate over the holiday weekendd. The outside hitter took to Instagram on July 3, announcing her engagement to Piper Wildeman. “July 3rd, thank you LORD, I said yes to marrying my best friend,” Krause wrote. The series of photos captured the moment Wildeman […]

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Former Nebraska Husker volleyball star Lindsay Krause added one more thing to celebrate over the holiday weekendd.

The outside hitter took to Instagram on July 3, announcing her engagement to Piper Wildeman.

“July 3rd, thank you LORD, I said yes to marrying my best friend,” Krause wrote.

The series of photos captured the moment Wildeman got down on one knee to watching fireworks together.

Several of Krause’s teammates at Nebraska congratulated the couple.

“YESSSS MISS LINDSAY,” said Lexi Rodriguez.

“I’m crying I love you,” added Harper Murray.

“IM SO HAPPY FOR U 2,” exclaimed Merritt Beason.

Bergen Reilly, Maisie Boesiger, Andi Jackson, Ally Batenhorst, Kennedi Orr, and Leyla Blackwell also congratulated the happy couple. Nebraska softball star Jordy Bahl also congratulated Krause.

Krause and Wildeman have begun wedding planning and created a website courtesy of The Knot. The date and location are to be determined but the nuptials will take place in Omaha. There is also a registry for those wanting to purchase gifts for the couple.

Krause finished her career at Nebraska after the 2024 season, completing her Bachelor’s degree in just three years. Since then, she was drafted and signed by the Omaha Supernovas of the Pro Volleyball Federation.

Wildeman is the brother of former Husker football player Tate Wildeman and is the son of former Iowa football star Parker Wildeman, who earned second-team All-Big Ten honors as a senior in 1994.

Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, subscribing to HuskerMax on YouTube, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.





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Qatar crowned champions of Gstaad beach volleyball tournament in Switzerland

GSTAAD: Qatar’s beach volleyball team, featuring the world-class duo of Cherif Younousse and Ahmed Tijan, clinched the title at the Gstaad Elite16 tournament in Switzerland after a straight-sets victory over Sweden’s Jacob Holting Nilsson and David Ahman in the final, with scores of 21-19 and 22-20. Qatar team displayed exceptional skill and composure throughout the […]

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GSTAAD: Qatar’s beach volleyball team, featuring the world-class duo of Cherif Younousse and Ahmed Tijan, clinched the title at the Gstaad Elite16 tournament in Switzerland after a straight-sets victory over Sweden’s Jacob Holting Nilsson and David Ahman in the final, with scores of 21-19 and 22-20.

Qatar team displayed exceptional skill and composure throughout the match, securing the championship in one of the premier stops of the Elite16 tour – part of the prestigious five-star circuit governed by the Federation Internationale de Volleyball (FIVB).

This triumph further cements Qatar’s standing among the world’s top beach volleyball nations and adds to an impressive string of achievements by the duo this season.

Earlier this year, Younousse and Tijan claimed gold at the Xiamen Elite16 event in China, followed by a victory at the Pingtan Asian Open. They also secured gold at the GCC Beach Games ‘Muscat 2025’.

On the continental stage, the Qatari pair continued their dominance by winning the 24th Asian Beach Volleyball Championship in Songkhla, Thailand – one of the continent’s oldest and most prestigious tournaments. They also took gold at the Asian Beach Tour held at Al Gharafa Beach Courts in Doha, defeating Australia in the final in straight sets, further underscoring the rising standard of Qatari beach volleyball and the growing strength of local competition.

Qatar’s beach volleyball program has seen a meteoric rise in recent years, marked by a bronze medal at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games and a fourth-place finish at Paris 2024. These accomplishments highlight the country’s steady progress toward becoming a global powerhouse in the sport.



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